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The VolcanoStories project by GeoTenerife is a multi-media, science communication project, creating bespoke resources about volcanic activity, preparedness,  reconstruction, and sustainable tourism in the Canary Islands. We collaborate with leading local, regional, and national institutions via our unique training programmes GeoIntern, VolcanoCamp, and MarineSciCamp for students and scholars from around the globe.

La Palma infrastructure reconstruction, struggles of the residents, and the eruption

Over-tourism protests, unsustainable resorts, and activist movements

Volcanic risk, emergency plans, communication, and preparedness in the Canary Islands.

New: Opinion Piece published on VolcanoStories

Short-form , easy-to-read, articles, which are relevant to the residents of the Canary Islands. Available en Español and in English.

Cuna del Alma, el Aula Marina, y las Tortugas

Las Islas Canarias se promocionan como un paraíso de biodiversidad y turismo sostenible. Pero la historia del Puertito de Adeje SeaLab revela una realidad muy distinta: un patrón en el que las autoridades locales explotan las iniciativas de restauración ambiental para generar relaciones públicas

Cuna del Alma, the SeaLab and the Turtles

The Canary Islands are marketing themselves as a paradise of biodiversity and sustainable tourism. But the story of the Puertito de Adeje SeaLab reveals a very different truth: a pattern in which local authorities exploit environmental restoration initiatives for public relations, only to erase them

NEW: La Palma Reconstruction Update

La Palma Reconstruction – December 2025

National Volcanology Centre Headquarters will be in La Palma - Gas extraction pipe installed in Puerto Naos - €1.2 billion spent by Spain on reconstruction - €100 million aid for lost farms - Income tax reduction extended until 2027 - LP-2 road reconstruction begins after delays - Protests from

La Palma Reconstruction – November 2025

GeoTenerife presents latest projects on La Palma - New 'disaster learning community' established on La Palma - International Tajogaite Eruption Conference brings volcanologists to La Palma - New biodiversity recovery study by CSIC - ISvolcan health impact study continues - Aid for farmers agreed - 3

Urgent events: 18M Protest

Frustrated by unchecked development and environmental degradation, 200,000 Canarians protested in April and several thousand again in October 2023, demanding a more sustainable tourism model that prioritises local needs and protects the islands’ fragile ecosystem. A third large-scale protest is being organised for May 2025 which we will be covering here on Urgent events.

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Cuna del Alma, el Aula Marina, y las Tortugas

Las Islas Canarias se promocionan como un paraíso de biodiversidad y turismo sostenible. Pero la historia del Puertito de Adeje SeaLab revela una realidad muy distinta: un patrón en el que las autoridades locales explotan las iniciativas de restauración ambiental para generar relaciones públicas

Protest Coverage

NEW: El Puertito and the Cuna del Alma resort

Cuna del Alma, el Aula Marina, y las Tortugas

Las Islas Canarias se promocionan como un paraíso de biodiversidad y turismo sostenible. Pero la historia del Puertito de Adeje SeaLab revela una realidad muy distinta: un patrón en el que las autoridades locales explotan las iniciativas de restauración ambiental para generar relaciones públicas

Cuna del Alma, the SeaLab and the Turtles

The Canary Islands are marketing themselves as a paradise of biodiversity and sustainable tourism. But the story of the Puertito de Adeje SeaLab reveals a very different truth: a pattern in which local authorities exploit environmental restoration initiatives for public relations, only to erase them

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The Conversation: When Public Scientists Forget Compassion

Opinion piece

By Sharon Backhouse

A week ago, an exchange on social media once again reopened wounds in La Palma. Luca D’Auria, a senior scientist at Involcan, responded to a local man who had lost his home in the 2021 eruption of the Tajogaite volcano with a comment that many in the community found shocking. Locals have contacted us via our VolcanoStories Forum for comment, calling for his dismissal.

A recent exchange on social media has raised concern in La Palma, Canary Islands. Dr Luca D’Auria, a prominent scientist at Involcan, wrote on Facebook that he “bled from the eyes” seeing a paper that had been published. Antonio Rodríguez, an affected resident of the Tajogaite 2021 eruption, commented bitterly that he “bled from the eyes” seeing D’Auria still on the public payroll. The senior scientist replied: “… entonces espero que sangres también por otros lados, así cobro más!” (“Then I hope you bleed from other parts too so I earn more!”)

For someone who lost his home in the eruption, to be mocked in such terms by a publicly funded scientist is not just cruel — it is corrosive to public trust.

This is not an isolated slip of the tongue. Over the past four years since the eruption, Involcan’s interactions on social media have repeatedly been accused of arrogance and insensitivity toward those directly affected. Many Palmeros recall the tone of some of the institute’s statements after the eruption as dismissive, even mocking. With Tenerife hosting Europe’s largest volcanic drill last week, at the same time as this exchange, those unresolved wounds have resurfaced.

We spoke to Antonio Rodríguez to ask him how the interaction on social media made him feel. He told us: “I just can’t stand this man because he has been very rude to the people affected by the volcano. One thing is to respond to comments, and quite another is to insult people. I think we’ve already bled enough and don’t need to keep bleeding, as he says, just so he can continue collecting his salary. I hope that at some point they take action against this character.”

Responsibility in Public Service

Involcan is not a privately-funded think tank. As a company of the Cabildo de Tenerife, funded by public money, it is tasked by the island council with safeguarding public safety in one of the most volcanically active regions of Europe. Its staff, whether they sit in laboratories or speak to the press, carry not only scientific authority but also a duty of care in how they address the public — especially disaster victims.

Iavcei, the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior, released guidelines for scientists and their communication:  "IAVCEI promotes dialogue at all levels within the local scientific community and among stakeholders during inter-eruptive periods. Developing a cooperative, united, and well-trained local scientific and stakeholder community is the strongest and most effective way to deal with volcanic crises." (Giordano et al., 2016). By those standards, D’Auria’s remarks would be more than just “inappropriate.” They would raise questions about his continued suitability to represent a public institution.

In most European countries, civil servants or scientists in public institutions are bound by strict codes of conduct. In the UK or France, for example, mocking victims of a disaster on a public platform would almost certainly trigger a disciplinary process. Universities and research institutes in North America similarly sanction staff who undermine public trust or demean citizens. Sanctions can range from reprimands to suspension or even dismissal, depending on severity.

Some might dismiss this as a personal spat on social media. But words from officials matter. In volcanic emergencies, trust in institutions is as important as scientific data. If citizens feel belittled or mocked, they are less likely to believe the same institutions during a volcanic emergency. 

La Palma’s eruption in 2021 left deep scars. Thousands lost homes, land, or livelihoods. Recovery remains incomplete. For those communities, every reminder of insensitivity feels like salt in the wound. A comment made online by a senior scientist is not “just a joke” — it is a betrayal of the compassion victims deserve from those paid with public funds to protect them.

What Needs to Change

Some locals are now calling for D’Auria’s dismissal. Whether or not the Cabildo de Tenerife takes that step, it is clear that a serious reckoning is overdue. Involcan must confront the culture of communication that has allowed such comments to be made — and, until now, go unaddressed.

This means:

  • Establishing clear codes of conduct for staff, including social media use.

  • Training scientists in risk communication and empathy, not just technical accuracy.

  • Creating mechanisms for victims to raise concerns without being dismissed or mocked.

  • Most importantly, demonstrating publicly that compassion is not optional in public service.

When disaster strikes, people look not only for scientific expertise but also for humanity. The role of organisations like Involcan is not simply to measure tremors or model lava flows; it is to help communities navigate trauma and uncertainty. That requires authority, yes — but also humility, empathy, and respect.

If those who represent our public institutions cannot meet that basic standard, the question is not whether they should apologise. It is whether they should continue to hold their positions at all.

We contacted the President of Tenerife and Involcan for comment, but received no response. We will add to this piece if we do.

Overall, the emergency management of the eruption has been criticised as being too slow and overly cautious, leading to the volcanic traffic light level not being raised to full alert before the eruption began. Read more here. The emergency management of the eruption was coordinated by PEVOLCA, in which Involcan, as an invited member and therefore Dr D’Auria, as a senior scientist, was deeply involved in. You can read our ongoing, open-access coverage of the 2021 eruption and reconstruction in La Palma here.

What is Involcan’s role in volcano monitoring and outreach?

IGN (The National Geographic Institute of Spain) is the national institution legally responsible for volcanic monitoring. However, the island Cabildo in Tenerife also established Involcan as a company in Tenerife with public funding over a decade ago, tasked with volcano monitoring and outreach to the local population. Although its name says it is an “Institution”, Involcan, as a private company of the Cabildo, has not been held to the same rigorous transparency and oversight obligations expected of publicly funded entities.

Under the terms of the Canarian volcano emergency plan, PEVOLCA, Involcan is invited to the Scientific Committee to share its data at times of volcanic crisis alongside others. PEVOLCA  also states that the Canarian Government is responsible for preparing the population for a possible future eruption.

Over the years, Involcan has received “significant” public funding for outreach programmes to inform the public about volcanic risk and promote readiness via programmes like “Canarias: una ventana volcánica en el Atlántico” (The Canaries: a volcanic window in the Atlantic). We have contacted the Tenerife Cabildo’s transparency portal twice this year to ask specifically how much money Involcan has received over the past decade for its outreach programmes and what the success of the programmes has been. We have yet to receive a response.  Current funding appears to be included in their TFRESILIENCIA project (strengthening municipal resilience in Tenerife for volcanic risk), with a budget of 123,000, although additional contributions from municipalities and other islands remain unclear.

Anecdotally, Involcan’s outreach programmes have been “poorly attended”. Residents in La Palma complain of having been “badly prepared” for an eruption, which raises questions about the success of Involcan’s outreach work in the past. 

References

IAVCEI Task Group on Crisis Protocols. Toward IAVCEI guidelines on the roles and responsibilities of scientists involved in volcanic hazard evaluation, risk mitigation, and crisis response. Bull Volcanol 78, 31 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-016-1021-8

Published articles and Opinion pieces

Our published work, posters and presentations at conferences can be accessed below through GeoTenerife’s VolcanoStories ResearchGate:

THE COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION PROCESS DURING THE LA PALMA ERUPTION ERRORS, SUCCESSES, LEARNINGS AND PROPOSALS FOR IMPROVEMENT

After nearly fifty years without showing obvious signs of volcanic activity on the surface, in 2021 there was a new eruption in the area known as Cabeza de Vaca in La Palma (Canary Islands, Spain). The eruption lasted eighty-five days and caused numerous losses due to the extensive area affected by

We aim to use our project to publish short-form articles, which are easy to read, and relevant to residents, especially La Palma’s reconstruction, volcanic readiness, and tourism practices in the Canary Islands. Available en Español and in English.

Cuna del Alma, el Aula Marina, y las Tortugas

Las Islas Canarias se promocionan como un paraíso de biodiversidad y turismo sostenible. Pero la historia del Puertito de Adeje SeaLab revela una realidad muy distinta: un patrón en el que las autoridades locales explotan las iniciativas de restauración ambiental para generar relaciones públicas

Lava Bombs Project

Lb1 poster screenshot (1)

Lava Bombs: Truths Behind The Volcano captures the explosive stories behind the crisis and response to the 2021 Volcán de Tajogaite eruption in Cumbre Vieja on La Palma in the Canary Islands. Lava Bombs reveals the heavy impact of this major disaster, through the voices of the affected people, emergency managers, politicians and scientists, as well as showcasing spectacular imagery captured by witnesses, news crews and drone pilots. Themes of communication, trust and missteps are analysed as we start to look towards lessons learned for future emergencies of all kinds

LB2 poster with laurels

Lava Bombs: The Reconstruction dives into what happens after the most destructive eruption in an island’s history ends. The eruption of the Tajogaite volcano hit international headlines in 2021, but LavaBombs Part 2 reveals the struggle to recover on this small island in the middle of the Atlantic. Through dramatic footage and intimate testimony from politicians, scientists, residents and activists this new documentary digs deep behind the headlines to unpick the successes and failures of the following two years post-eruption.

Urgent Events in the Canary Islands

We aim to collect and publish updates, from trustworthy news sources, regarding urgent events in the Canary Islands, so that residents and tourists alike can use this hub of information during an emergency and act as a record of events after the event has ended.

Demonstrations against unsustainable tourism

• Summarising key events in a simple timeline • Database of news coverage and social media responses • Resources on why the foundations are organising demonstrations • GeoTenerife's press releases and comments to the international media

Tens of thousands of Canarian residents protested on the 20th of April and October to make their concerns heard about unsustainable tourism; They want a new tourism model implemented that incorporates their concerns and protects their biodiverse paradise in the Atlantic. GeoTenerife compiles news resources and social media on this developing story below so that locals, students, researchers and journalists alike can access it openly.

Tenerife’s 2023 wildfire was the most devastating fire in the Canary Islands in the last 40 years and the most severe in Spain in 2023; The fire affected nearly 15,000 hectares, burning 7% of the surface of Tenerife, and causing 80.4 million euros of damage. The forest fire has caused approximately 12 million euros of damage to the agricultural sector, including 2,500-3,500 hives that were destroyed. In addition, it caused more than 12,000 people to have to be evacuated throughout the course of the fire, 364 farms and 246 buildings were affected. Up to 60 protected species may have been impacted by the forest fire, but the true impact on these species is not yet known.

The volcanic eruption on La Palma was preceded by a seismic swarm starting on September 11th, and by September 19th the volcano, later named Tajogaite, started erupting. Over the following weeks and months, the lava flows continued to advance, encroaching over 900 hectares of land and destroying more than 1,000 buildings. The eruption was accompanied by earthquakes with magnitudes up to 5.1 mbLg, occasionally felt across multiple Canary Islands. 

Our Day-by-Day Eruption Updates from September 11th 2021 – December 25th 2021 includes:

  • Maps of lava flows, earthquakes, and exclusion zones each day
  • Summary of geological data released by IGN
  • Twitter posts made by official Canarian civil service accounts and scientists

Outreach

Interviews

We are often interviewed by local, national, and international news sources for information about volcanic activity, forest fires, and more in the Canary Islands. We are happy to share our knowledge with as many people as possible.

Resident focus

Alongside our resident-focused science, we run the campaigns FFP2 and SamuLaPalma to support those affected by the La Palma 2021 eruption. Furthermore, we make school visits to encourage volcano science in younger Canarian Residents, and also make our internship programmes accessible to students who live in the Canary Islands to ensure our projects benefit the residents of the Canary Islands.

Conferences

We co-organise the annual VulcanaSymposium with the IEO and also attend other volcanological conferences,  VMSG, IAVCEI, and COV12, to discuss our projects and their results with experts in the field of volcano science, in particular Q&As for our LavaBombs documentary. Our VolcanoStories Content Co-ordinator was invited to present at the Royal Holloway University Lyell Geology Day regarding the Tajogaite Eruption timeline project.

Collaborations

GeoTenerife is committed to fostering valuable collaborations with local, national, and international research institutions, to both conduct valuable geoscience research in the Canary Islands

We are always looking to welcome new collaborations, so if you or your company/research institution is interested in collaborating with us, please get in touch with us via enquiries@geotenerife.com

Our Collaborators include:

  • IGN, Instituto Geográfico Nacional
  • Dr Catalina Arguello, Social Psychologist, Universidad Internacional de La Rioja
  • Dr Katy Chamberlain, Volcanologist, Liverpool University
  • Dr Pablo Gonzalez, Volcano Geophysicist, Spanish National Research Council

and many more valued collaborators.

VolcanoStories Team

Sharon Backhouse

She/Her

VolcanoStories Director, with decades of journalism experience and producer director of award-winning documentary series.

Ben Ireland

He/Him

VolcanoStories editor and volcanic remote sensing PhD student at the University of Bristol

Ajay Wynne Jones

He/Him

VolcanoStories content co-ordinator with a background in earth and environmental science at Lancaster University

Isabel Queay

She/They

VolcanoStories content creator with a Geology background from the University of Glasgow

Tamsin Backhouse

She/Her

VolcanoStories Social media manager with a background in Spanish and politics from the University of Bath

If you were involved in or affected by the 2021 La Palma eruption in any way, we would love to hear from you about your experiences and thoughts. If you would like to contribute towards this work, please visit our Contribute page

Contribute

VolcanoStories content is freely available for students, educational establishments and academics – all we ask is that you cite “GeoTenerife’s VolcanoStories”. 

How to Cite us

GeoTenerife’s VolcanoStories content is not to be used for commercial use. Any media or commercial outlet wanting to use any content herein should contact us in writing in the first instance via enquiries@geotenerife.com. For more detail, refer to our Terms of Use.

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